
THE AMAZONS 



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LIBRARY OF CONGRESS. 

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UNITED STATES OP AMERICA. 



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THE AMAZONS 



THE AMAZONS 



A Lyrical Drama 



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Copyrigat. 1891, 
By Flood & Vincent. 



The ChautauquorCentury Pre.^s, Meadville, Pa., U. S. A. 
Electrotyped, Printed and Bound by Flood & Vincent. 



TO 
MRS. MARY H. FIELD 

OF 

SAN JOSE CALIFORNIA 

THIS BOOK 

IS AFFECTIONATELY DEDICATED. 



THE AMAZONS 



DEAMATIS PERSONS 

PENTHESILEA THERSITES 

ACHILiIiES ^NEAS 

DIOMED MESSENGER 

CHORUS OF AMAZONS 



ARGUMENT. 
The Amazons, hearing of the death of Hector and 
the extremity of the Trojans, come, under the leader- 
ship of their queen, Penthesilea, to assist them. She 
challenges Achilles to single combat and is slain by 
him, but not before he has noted her marvellous 
beauty and great courage, and moved with sudden 
love, would have with-held the fatal blow. He 
laments over her death, and is taunted by Thersites, 
who speaks mockingly of the queen. Angered be- 
yond endurance, Achilles turns upon him and slays 
him. Diomed, to avenge Thersites' death, steals the 
body of Penthesilea, which Achilles had returned to 
the Amazons, and casts it into the Scamander. 



THE AMAZONS. 

Scene: the plain of Troy. Time: evening and night, 

ACHILLES. 

Slow are the gods to work the will of men. 

A hundred times the moon has risen pale, 

A little crescent boat that skinmied the waves 

Of deeps unknown ; a hundred times has spread 

Her silver sails on her adventurous course, 

And as she drifted near her journey's end, 

Drawn them again and trembled into rest. 

And thrice a thousand times the splendid car 

Of day has glittered on the mountain's brow. 

And the swift steeds have swept its noiseless wheels 

Through the cerulean spaces of the sky. 

And thrice a thousand times the calm-browed night 

Has risen majestic from the unfathomed depths 

Of subterranean being and let fall 

Quiet and cooling shadow on the earth. 

The birds have nested, brooded, flown again. 

Nine times ; the beasts have mated in their lairs, 

And their young range the echoing woods no more. 

Our children, hsping at our knees, have grown 

To youths and maidens, strong and beautiful, 

And yet we hnger on the plains of Troy. 

Nine years the Achaean hosts have sacrificed 



14 THE AMAZONS, 

With pious rites to all the Olympians, 

And promised stately temples, household shrines, 

And wayside altars, if they will but give 

The city to our hands ; and still we wait, 

While Priam reigns within his stately halls, 

And fall our heroes to the joyful hymns 

And notes of laughter within the Trojan gates. 

Well that we turned their hearts for once to grief, 

With Hector slain ; well that we hear the wails 

Of women for their husbands who went forth 

Haughty and strong, to widow waiting hearts 

In Hellas ; we have smitten heavily. 

And victory will follow it erelong. 

How many of our noblest have they heaped, 

Stained with the dust, upon the battle-plain ? 

Thou knowest, Diomed, how many left 

The fertile fields and busy streets of home. 

Whose feet will tread familiar ways no more, 

Lost in the mazes of dark Pluto's realms. 

Thou knowest how we are aUens from the land 

We love, brought hither on a fruitless quest, 

Empty the house of Menelaus still, 

And Helen yet within the walls of Troy. 

Sad is my heart for all my comrades lost. 

Heavy and sad that we must battle more; 

Since years agone the city should have lain, 

Ashes and ruins, and her people fled 

Swift from our spear-points and the following flame. 

DIOMED. 

Nay, be not sad, Achilles, have we not 
Brought low the mightiest of the enemy, 
Avenged our heroes slain with princely sons 
Of Priam, and the greatest of the race ? 
Nor speak complaining of the all-seeing gods. 
Who often mingled with us in the fight. 
Thou surely dost remember our great deeds. 
That time Sarpedon slew Tlepolemus, 



THE AMAZONS. 15 

And Pallas moved beside us on the field. 

Our swords were winds and drove the foe as dust, 

Confused and dense and setthng on the plain 

Beneath our strokes ; they were storm-winds and beat 

Back from the shore into an unknown sea 

The mighty breaking billows of the war, 

That thundered heavily and gathered up 

Their strength against us only to succumb 

Into the ebb-tide's sobs and murmurous moans. 

Ay, they were rains and tempests that fell down 

On flower and fruit, and left the field despoiled ; 

They were a bhght that gathered all to soon 

The purple vintage of the fallen ranks. 

Dost thou forget the steeds celestial won 

That day from great ^neas, when he fell 

And would have perished had not Venus borne 

Her son beloved from the battle-field ? 

Oh ! we were eagles, and the timid broods 

Of Ilium's nestlings drove with broken wings 

Back to their shelter ; while the god of war. 

Like a great vulture, hovered o'er the dead. 

ACHILLES. 

Enough ; my soul responsive leaps to thoughts 
Of war and conquest ;• I would test the arms 
Of mightiest heroes ; sweeter is the fight 
To noble hearts than home and ease and love. 
In battle we are gods, for we subdue. 
And hold the power of life and death ; we feel, 
Lifting the spear above the prostrate foe, 
As the Olympians when they look to earth, 
And say^ " This man shall die and that one live." 
Oh ! we are drunken with the wine of power ; 
Raised with the magic of the ruddy draught 
From grovellers of the earth to dizzy heights 
Where only foot immortal dares to tread. 
Peace is for women ; for the warrior, arms. 
Glory, and conquest ; in the clash of shield 



16 THE AMAZONS, 

And point of spear is music for his heart: 
And does he think of home, it is to go 
Full of renown and honor to the sire 
That sits in old age helpless and alone, 
A ruined column crumbling to its fall. 
But who are these approach the plains of Troy ? 
Has Ocean sent an army of white nymphs, 
Or have the satyrs startled from the woods 
Fleet-footed bacchanals that follow Pan ? 
Or from the mountains have the oreads. 
Binding their tresses, left their lonely heights 
And sylvan gods, to dwell below with men ? 
Or rather have the fountains and the streams 
Given their hmniad races to the earth ? 
So fair and beautiful are these who come. 
Surely the off-spring of some source divine. 

DIOMED. 

Like fields of clover rippled by the wind, 
Or like the crested foam on breaking waves. 
They come, as white, as multitudinous. 
Or like the million stars that nightly shine, 
AYhile in their midst hangs luminous the moon. 
Her silvery glory brighter than them all, 
They seem, with one, the fairest, at their head. 
Lo ! she might be the lovely archer-queen, 
So white her arms, so fleet her glancing feet. 
So bright, like ripened wheat, her shining hair. 

ACHILLES. 

Hark ! they come singing and a battle-cry 
Mingles with all the music of their words. 

CHORUS. 

" Zeu Soter, kai Xike," 
We look, Oh ! Lord, to thee. 
The lord of heaven and light, 
To slay the sons of night, 



THE AMAZONiS, 17 

To battle for the free. 

Give victory to the right, 

Uphold us with thy might, 
Who come a shield to be, 
A sword the oppressed to free. 

And put their foes to flight. 

And give thou victory. 
To her who follows thee. 

Thou archer queen of night 

Thou maiden silver-white. 
Whom mortals dare not see. 

And thou, the goddess bright. 
With shield and helmet dight, 

Whose worshippers are we ; 

Lend us who pray to thee 
The aegis-bearer's might. 

ACHIIiliES. 

Their silvery voices linger in the air 

Like echoes of the njTnphs that haunt the streams 

And dreamy coverts of Hellenic groves. 

DIOMED. 

Lo ! still they sing, and from their snowy throats 
Come sweeter strains than from enchanted woods, 
Or shores reverberant with siren songs. 

CHORUS, 

The maiden without stain 
Forgot no wayside fane, 

And left no altar bare, 

To god of earth or air. 
Or stream or stormy main. 
Oh ! spirits everywhere, 
Invisible and fair. 

Avenge through us the slain, 

Unloose the forged chain 



18 THE AMAZONS. 

A conquered people wear. 

Nine years on Troy has lain 
A curse of weary pain, 

Of battle and despair ; 

For her the shield we bear 
And draw the sword again. 

For her we bind the hair, 
For her the conflict dare, 
For her on battle-plain 
We heap the mighty slain ; 
Our cause be heaven's care. 

ACHILLES. 

Why come ye singing to the battle-plain ? 
What would ye with Achaen warriors ? ye 
Who seem like herald goddesses of morn, 
So fair and beautiful, so fleet of foot ? 

CHORUS. 

For Troy the shield we bear, 
For Troy we bind the hair. 

And draw the girdle up ; 

For Troy we spill the cup 
In sacriflcial prayer. 

ACHILLES. 

These are no n;yTiiphs, no goddesses of mirth, 
But women warriors armed for deadly strife. 

DIOMED. 

'Tis Penthesilea and the Amazons. 

CHORUS. 

We come as wind and wave, 
Swept from .^olus' cave, 

And blown across the deep ; 

We come to guard and keep 
The city of the brave. 



THE AMAZONS. 19 

We come as storms that sweep 
The valleys from their sleep ; 
We come to smite and save, 
To give what freedom gave, 
With blood the sod to steep. 

Let strife and carnage rave ; 
The harvest that we crave, 

Our swords as sickles reap ; 

The noble slain we heap, 
The plain with dead we pave. 

Quiet for those that leap, 
Laughter for those that weep, 

For those that slay, the grave ; 

And freedom for the slave ; 
The spring-tide for the neap. 

PENTHESILEA. 

Where is the son of Thetis, he who slew 

The vaUant Hector, and around the walls 

Of Priam's city dragged the hapless corse 

Thrice with his chariot ? Thinks he that the gods 

Suffer such insult to the pious slain ? 

Where is the man that stained the warrior's deed 

With private vengeance ? Stands he at the head 

Of noble warriors whose heroic deeds 

Are heralded in high Olympian halls ? 

ACHILLES. 

I am Achilles ; who art thou, fair queen. 
For queen thou must be, great as beautiful. 

PENTHESILEA. 

Oh ! know ye not the warlike Amazons ? 
We are the bearers of the crescent shield. 
Worshippers of the huntress Artemis, 
Skillful with bow and arrow, strong of limb, 
Fearless alike of all the race of men. 



20 THE AMAZONS. 

Our mothers reared us from our infancy 
To war and hunting ; and we know the deeds 
Of ancestors that make our powerful race 
Illustrous and dreaded among men. 
'Twas we that founded mighty Ephesus, 
And built the temple to the archer queen. 
The Asiatic hordes we drove before 
Our glancing spears and raised the battle-axe 
In arms made strong by high 01;>Tnpian blood. 
Our land is northward by the mighty sea, 
And there where flows the river Thermodon, 
The towers and ramparts of our capital 
Reflect the gUttering glances of the sun. 
And I am Penthesilea, maiden queen, 
Daughter of Ares, who upholds my arm 
In battle, and makes good my deadly stroke. 
No quarter do we either give or take ; 
Prepare for combat, son of Peleus ; 
For thee I seek upon the battle-plain ; 
Thee would I offer to avenge the dead. 

ACHILLES. 

Nay, thou art formed for other battle-plains, 
Womanly victories and bloodless strife. 
None dare oppose thee if thou battle thus, 
And willingly I yield me to thy might. 

PENTHESILEA. 

Ay, women's hearts do hunger after love, 
As flowers that lift their thirsty faces up 
To feel the dew ; and yet, methinks, oft-times, 
There is a hunger of the soul that strives 
After great deeds ; why would ye bar the way. 
Pinion the mighty spirit if it be, 
Perchance, enfolded in a woman's form ? 
Do we not long for food and drink as ye, 
Welcome the sea-wind blown across the plain. 
Rejoice in light of day, and feel the blood 



THE AMAZONS. 2X 

Leap to behold the grandeur of the storm ? 
Are we not subject unto birth and death, 
Weary with labor, spent with fruitless pain ; 
Know we not pity and anger, grief and love', 
Even as ye ? why should we then alone. 
Unsatisfied, dwell thus apart and seek 
Love to appease all hunger? why not flU. 
Our life with many and illustrous deeds. 
Making our spirits mates for those we love ? 
True marriage is community of soul, 
Thought, feeling, passion ; perfect harmony ; 
And strains responsive to the skillful touch 
Of love, blend in celestial melody. 
Two separate chords united in a sound. 

ACHIIiliES. 

Enough, fair queen, for you would steal away 
Men's reason with the music of your speech. 
Woman's best logic is the witchery 
Of grace and beauty and melodious voice. 
By these she casts a spell about men's hearts, 
And makes them ready servants to her will. 
But much I wonder you have come to Troy. 
What heralds took you tidings of the deeds 
Of battle-plains ? Why left ye peaceful halls 
To mingle with the strife on foreign shores? 

PENTHESILEA. 

The thunder of the war across the sea 

Rolled heavily and shook the peristyle 

Of Amazonian warriors, and they rose 

From love's embrace and children's clinging hands, 

And girdled up their garments and put on 

Their sandals ; and with mighty sword and shield. 

They sped with swift feet winged like the winds ; 

And hke the winds that sweep across the land, 

Heavy with storms, are come to smite the strong, 

Who heaped their insults on the noble slain. 



22 THE AMAZONS. 

Oh I heard we not the sad Andromache, 

With loosened raiment and dishevelled hair, 

Surrounded by her sorrowing maidens, wail 

To heaven, while her orphaned infant's cry 

Blended its shrill note with her loud complaint? 

Thus have I heard a storm upon the deep, 

With fearful roarings sweep its awful track 

Across the waves ; when breaks a sudden sound 

Of high-voiced winds that, sobbing, die away. 

We saw the desolation in the halls 

Of Priam's stately palace, and the gloom. 

Where erst the hearth-fire glowed and fountains 

leaped, 
Mid bowers of fragrance ; and the hero lay, 
Returned from battle, on the silken couch, 
Broidered by skillful fingers of his bride ; 
Where the king's fifty children came and went 
Bejoicing in the prowess of their arms ; 
Thrice happy and thrice blessed in the walls 
Of home, the bloody battle all forgot 
In the soft glances of fond women's eyes. 
And innocent prattle of their infant sons ; 
Where cakes were burned and ruddy goblets spilled 
Upon the altars of the household gods, 
And at the dawning, joyful paeans rose ; 
Where oft the marriage-torches lit the walls, 
And oft to Hera offerings were made 
In gratitude another child was born 
To the great race of Priam. Silent now 
The morning hymn ; and smouldering embers strew 
The hearth ; the women's fingers weave no more, 
But rend the masses of their streaming hair. 
All, all is desolate ; for Hector slain. 
Rise wildest dirges and insistent prayers 
To the high gods for vengeance. All is changed, 
As when above a blooming garden pass 
Sear desert winds ; or over pleasant groves. 
Dropping Jove's bolts of thunder, trails the storm. 



THE AMAZONS, 2S 

ACHILLES. 

Tell me not thus the sorrow in the halls 

Of Priam ; tell me rather if you saw 

Paris and Helen wandering side by side 

With amorous words, or watched them sit apart, 

Drinking the glances of each other's eyes. 

The house of Menelaus, desolate 

But for the slaves that wait their lord's return, 

Speaks louder to my heart than all the tears 

And fruitless wails of Priam's fifty sons. 

And tell me if you saw Patroclus fall 

Like fruit unripened that the hurrying wind 

Dashes to earth ; his strength and beauty lost 

To sate the anger of the men of Troy. 

As thou art beautiful, be also just 

And to the oppressor offer not thy aid. 

As thou art maiden, lift not up the sword 

For one who stole the virtue of a wife ; 

As thou art woman, suffer not thy hand 

To pierce a warrior-breast with deadly steel. 

I would not stain thy white limbs with the dust, 

Nor dim the lustrous beauty of thine eyes ; 

I would not redden with thy ruby blood 

The gleaming fairness of thy breast and brow. 

PENTHESILEA. 

The Amazons are brave and strong of arm 

And ask not mercy of the haughty Greek. 

But fear thou, for the gods are on our side. 

Did they not look with pity and anger down 

From out the golden parapets of heaven, 

While swept thy chariot round the walls of Troy , 

Dragging brave Hector's body in the dust? 

Oh ! thinkst thou not Andromache was sad 

With longing for the beauty of his eyes, 

And blood-stained fairness of his breast and brow ? 

Oh ! thinkst thou not she wept to see the dust 



24 THE AMAZONiS. 

Stain all his whiteness ? Even so some maid 
Of Greece shall weep at hearing of thy fate. 

ACHILLES. 

Lift not thy sword, for I would spare thee, queen. 

PENTHESILEA. 

Lift thou thy sword, or perish at my hand. 

ACHILLES. 

Pause but a moment ; thou art wondrous fair. 

PENTHESILEA. 

My face no fairer than my arm is strong. 

ACHILLES. 

Thy arm was made for love and not for war. 

PENTHESILEA. 

Yet can it strike a sure and deadly blow. 

ACHILLES. 

Forbear ! forbear ! the Fates are on my side. 

PENTHESILEA. 

The gods for Penthesilea and for Troy I 

CHORUS. 

He reels from the stroke, 

He staggers and reels, 
As the strong mountain oak 

That shivers and feels 
The blast of the storm ; 

But again proudly stands 
With straight, god-like form, 

And uplifted strong hands. 

ACHILLES. 

Yield, I will spare thee, noble Amazon. 



THE AMAZONS, 25 

PENTHESILEA. 

Nay, I will strike thee with a surer blow. 

ACHILLES. 

Alas ! then must my heaven-made sword meet thine. 

CHORUS. 

The maiden advances, 

They grapple and fight ; 
The blades of their lances 

Are flashes of light. 
She has stricken his shield 

From the might of his grasp ; 
But she sinks on the field 

With a moan and a gasp. 

She is fallen, our queen, 

She is fallen and slain ; 
Where her prowess was seen 

On the red Trojan plain. 
Like a white flower she lies, 

As pure and as fair ; 
But with night on her eyes, 

And with dust in her hair. 

PENTHESILEA. 

Achilles, this day have the high gods defended 
The might of thy arm and the combat is ended. 
Yet spare me the shame of dead Hector, I pray, 
Lest the gods in their anger should smite thee and 
slay. 

CHORUS. 

Let us bear her away 
From the field of the fight. 

While the heavens are gray 
With the coming of night. 

You will build you a fire 



26 THE AMAZONS. 

And the sacrifice spread, 
But the Trojans a pyre 
For the rites of the dead. 

PENTHESILEA. 

I bend to the will of the gods ; who can raise 
A snare for their feet or a bar to their ways ? 
They veil them in splendor and hide them in light, 
But for us is the darkness and gloom of the night. 

CHORUS. 

By the hand of Fate our doom is written 

In blood-red letters on Time's dark scroll ; 
We fall by the breath of the high gods smitten, 

And darkness gathers about the soul. 
We seek the gods and we follow after, 
But cry in vain ; for Olympic laughter 
Echoes in heaven from hull to rafter. 

The way is dark and the path is lonely 
Our feet must travel in silence and night ; 

If the gods in their bright abodes would only 
Give us a gleam of their golden light, 

Safely the soul would pass the dim places 

Into the deep unfathomed spaces 

Where dead men walk with shadowy faces. 

ACHIIiLES. 

Sweet Amazon, fain would I give back thy breath ; 
But fear not dishonor will follow thy death. 
Thy comrades shall close the white lids of thine eyes, 
And above thee the smoke of the sacrifice rise. 
And over thy ashes a mound they shall raise, 
Nor thy soul wander homeless on desolate ways. 

CHORUS. 

He lifts her, he holds her 

Fast sinking to rest. 
His strong arm enfolds her, 



THE AMAZONS. 27 

She lies on his breast. 
His eyes like a lover's 

Are hot and afraid ; 
With her tresses he covers l 

The wound he has made. 

ACHILLES. 

Fairest of queens, couldst thou but live again, 
Sooner my sword would sever my right hand 
Than it should drink the red draught of thy blood, 
Dim the twin constellation of thine eyes, 
And part thy sweet Ups with thy passing soul. 
Wert thou not dying, I would speak fond words, 
Tell thee how lovely the Hellenic fields, 
And tempt thee back with me from bloody wars. 
But what can Love avail when death is near ? 
I call in vain, I can not see her face, 
But only the deep darkness of thy night. 

CHORUS. 

Oh ! Love once fled from the Fate that follows. 
O'er rugged path-ways, through mist-hung hollows ; 
Swifter her feet than the wing& of swallows, 
But swifter far were the feet of Fate. 

Oh ! seek her not in Olympic places, 
iSTor among the perfect, immortal faces. 
You will find her dead with the woodland races, 
And her olden coverts desolate. 

ACHILLES. 

Alas ! 'tis true ; for me no more will shine 
Through the dark nights the glory of Love's eyes. 

CHORUS. 

Hark ! men mourn her with paeans tragic ; 
Only the touch of youth has magic 
To waken once more the tremulous breath. 



28 THE AMAZONS, 

ACHILLES. 

My hand will quicken not to life again ; 
For me she sleeps with Penthesilea dead. 

CHORUS. 

Over the white of the rose's petals, 
Dimly a shadow phantasmal settles ; 

The queen and thy love are one in death. 

PENTHESILEA. 

To die is sweet when sheltered in thy arms ; 

And yet, indeed, it had been sweet to live. 

And follow thee to thy Hellenic home. 

But the gods, jealous that they gave us breath. 

And made us love and joy even as themselves. 

Stir in our draught of life a bitter herb, 

And dash the unemptied goblet from our Ups. 

CHORUS. 

We have known thee, O, Life ! thou art sweet 

To the lips as the heart of a flower ; 

But the breath of thy perfume is fleet. 

And thy joy is the bloom of an hour. 

We have known thee, O, Life ! thou art fair. 

But thy beauty the Sirens had ; 

And stained are the robes thou dost wear ; 

We have known thee, O, Life ! thou art sad. 

We have known thee, O, Life ! thou art strong ; 

Thou art strong, and thy burdens are great ; 

We have feared thee and worshipped thee long, 

For thy form is the shadow of Fate. 

Thou hast given us faith as a gem ; 

It was lost in the flush of the morn ; 

And virtue, a garment whose hem 

Was unspotted, the storm- winds have torn. 

Thou hast given us love as a flower ; 

It has withered and died on the breast ; 

Thou hast given us riches and power ; 



THE AMAZONS, 

They have vanished as foam from the crest. 

Thou hast given us hope as a staff; 

It is trampled and broken by fears ; 

And the red wine of pleasure to quaff; 

It is darkling, and bitter with tears. 

Thou hast given us fame as a crown, 

But hast tarnished its glory with rust ; 

Thou hast sprinkled the robes of renown 

With the soil of thy ashes and dust. 

We have known thee, O, Life ! thou art fleet, 

And the span of thy race is a breath ; 

We have followed the path of thy feet, 

And the goal that thou seekest is death. 

PENTHESILEA. 

Farewell, sweet world ; across the window, whence 

I looked upon the beauty of the hills 

And saw the sun rise and the twilight fall, 

Is drawn the curtain, and I see no more. 

Achilles, in your far Hellenic home. 

When men shall praise the prowess of your arm, 

Tell how you fought upon the Trojan field 

And none could stand against your godlike power ; 

When your fair wife ( some lovely Grecian maid 

Now waiting breathless for the long war's end) 

Shall lift your infant from her fragrant breast 

And lay it, softly cooing, in your arms ; 

When life is full and brimming o'er with joy. 

Think of me once with kindness and forget. 

ACHILLES. 

Ye gods, but hear my vows ; I promise lambs 
And spotless bullocks and the salted cakes. 
With full libations on your altars poured. 
Six days and nights, if ye will hear my prayer. 
Snatch from the realms of Pluto this one shade, 
Call back the soul that walks the shadowy road 
To the dim river and the ghostly boat 
Of Charon ; hear me once before I die, 



30 THE AMAZONS. 

Let my feet never touch the blooming fields 

Of Hellas more, if only she may live. 

Zeus, thou wert not unheedful to^the prayer 

Of nereid Thetis, rising from the sea. 

To clasp thy knees, a suppliant for her son. 

Hear now that son, and many fanes shall rise, 

And sacred altars, and a temple built 

In Hellas, and thy image in the midst. 

Alas ! the gods will harken not my woe. 

Would my good sword had found my throbbing 

heart. 
Ere its steel cleft the snows of thy soft bosom, 
And quenched the precious fire that burned within. 
Sweet queen, the music of thy voice is hushed 
As winds are silent on a broken lyre ; 
Thy body, like a temple grand and fair, 
Despoiled of all the images within, 
Empty and desolate ; thy shining eyes 
Deep hidden in a dark and starless night. 

CHOBUS. 

To the wild forester 
Sounds the wind chorister 
Breaking o'er mountains 
And blowing o'er seas ; 
Heaven sends rains to him 
And the rich plains to him 
Offer their fountains 
And fruits of their trees. 

Cares not for money he, 
Hybla's wild honey-bee 
Gives him her treasure, 
The squirrel his store ; 
For fame unknown to him, 
Pure joys atone to him ; 
Full is his measure, 
He seeks not for mora 



THE AMAZONS. 

Though day is luminous, 
Heaven sheds gloom on us, 
And the woods birdless 
But sigh to the wind ; 
For our fair maiden queen 
Now is dust-laden seen, 
Pallid and wordless, 
Unhearing and blind. 

But her virginity 
Sheds a divinity 
Over the features 
So lovely in death. 
Would we could follow her 
Where the shades swallow her ; 
We are but creatures 
Made heavy with breath. 

Glory is powerless, 
Beauty is flowerless 
In the dark places 
Where Pluto abides ; 
Love's spontaneity 
Shorn of its deity ; 
Darkened the faces 
Of lovers and brides. 

In war victorious, 
In battle glorious, 
With lance and with quiver, 
Walked proudly the maid. 
Mid phantoms numberless, 
Wandering slumberless. 
Homeless forever, 
Gropes lonely her shade. 

.ENEAS. 

Oh ! what is this, most pitiful to see ? 

Just now I hastened through the Scaean gate, 

Across the plain to where the combat raged. 



32 THE AMAZONS. 

Hopeful the Amazons, whose moving host 
Seemed numberless, would strike a heavy blow 
Upon the enemy ; but at their feet 
Low hes the far-fiimed queen ; unhappy fate, 
To sink amid her arms and clanging shield. 
No more to lift the lance or throw the spear, 
So young and lovely, on the battle-plain. 

ACHILLES. 

More beautiful and fair upon the field 
Than in the heavens new-risen, the evening star ; 
Sweeter than breath of flowers in summer winds. 
Fresher than breezes from the ocean blown 
On thirsty fields, the maiden-warrior lies. 
Lovelier than dawn upon the mountain-tops, "* 
Fleeter than nymphs that flee and follow Pan, 
Was Penthesilea ; silent now and cold. 
Paler than limniad faces in the springs. 

CHORUS. 

Like a lily fallen 

Lies she there ; 
Like the fily's pollen 

Is her hair. 

Rise her face and bosom 

From her mail. 
Like the perfect blossom 

Pure and pale. 

JENEAS. 

Like a lotus blooming 

In the reeds. 
When, the shadows glooming, 

Day recedes. 

Like a white uplifted 

Asphodel ; 
Like its petals drifted 

As they fell. 



THE AMAZONS. 
CHORUS. 

Why did we come hither 

To the fight, 
Where the flower must wither 

In our sight ? 

ACHILLES. 

Thou art a fallen cedar, 
Thou art a wind-blown cypress, 
Beautiful Amazon leader ; 
Yet a frail lily that I press 
Rudely in impious fingers, 
Over which, bruised and broken, 
Exquisite fragrance still lingers. 
Of its lost freshness the token. 
Thou art the fairest and sweetest 
Born of all women, completest ; 
To the Olympians nearest. 
And to Achilles the dearest. 
Thine were the lightest and fleetest 
Of the swift feet in the chases ; 
Thine were the fleetest and lightest ; 
Thine was the bosom the whitest ; 
Thou, of all maidens the rarest. 
Lost to thy lover's embraces, 
Thou art the sweetest and fairest. 

CHORUS. 

Vain is it we languish 

Desolate ; 
Vain Achilles' anguish 

At thy fate. 

Blossom perfect-moulded. 
Touched with night. 

All thy heart is folded 
Out of sight. 



34 THE AMAZONiS, 

jENEAS. 

Vain the dirge and ditty 

That we sing ; 
Vain the love and pity 

Of the king. 

To the darkness bidden, 

Thou must sleep, 
liike a jewel hidden 

In the deex). 

CHORUS. 

And for thee the chill is 

And tlie gloom ; 
But for thine Achilles, 

Life and bloom. 

ACHILLES. 

Life without love is a lute 
Wanting a touch on the strings ; 
Perfect, but songless and mute. 
It is a bird without wings, 
Longing for deeps of the sky. 
It is a soul without birth ; 
It is a spirit of earth, 
Yearning for infinite things. 

Life without love is a night 
Starless, unknown of the moon ; 
Day, without dawning of light, 
Shadows and darkness at noon. 
It is a fountain gone dry ; 
It is a weight on the feet ; 
Embers of fire without heat ; 
Words of a song without tune. 

Life full of love is a stream 
Lost in the ocean ; a leaf 
Fading in crimson ; a dream. 



THE AMAZONS, 35 

Love, like a phantom of grief, 
Spectral and dim, glimmers by. 
Fails at the threshold of death. 
Passes from man like a breath. 
Leaves him alone on the reef. 

CHORUS. 

Sleep, thou peerless maiden, 

Nor awake, 
Where the sorrow-laden 

Heart may break. 

What to thee the battle 

And the field ? 
What the lance's rattle 

On the shield? 

What the hfe-blood staining 

Dust with red ? 
Women's loud complaining 

For the dead ? 

Silence is around thee, 

And above ; 
Snapped the chains that bound thee, 

Fame and love. 

Is the world without thee? 

It has been. 
Darkness is about thee, 

And within. 

All that now encumber 

Earthly sight 
Soon will know the slumber 

Of thy night. 

Soon their ears will hearken 

Ghostly hymn ; 
Soon their eyes will darken 

And grow dim. 



THE AMAZONS. 

Soon the urn will cover 

Up the cold 
Ashes of thy lover 

And enfold 

(But a transient story 

Of decay), 
All his strength and glory 
Passed away. 

Full of striving, trouble, 

Mystery, 
Man is but a bubble 

In the sea. 

But a tree uprooted 

By the wind, 
With his hopes unfruited 

Left behind. 

But the storm-clouds' masses, 

And their flight ; 
But a day that passes 

Into night. 

ACHILLES. 

Gone is the hght from the sky. 

Gone is the music of earth ; 
Silent the wind passes by ; 

Empty the houses of mirth. 
For in my heart all have fled 

Out of its chambers and halls ; 

Only the ghostly foot-falls 
Of hopes and of memories dead. 

Love has departed with thee, 
Beautiful Amazon queen ; 

Leaving the shadow with me, 
Only of that which has been. 

And for the beauty of faith, 
And for the fragrance of joy. 



THE AMAZONS. 37 

(Oh! for these battles of Troy) 
Only a ghost and a wraith. 

Never with thee to abide, 

Empty and useless is life ; 
Haply with thee for my bride, 

I would remember the strife 
Only as dreams that are dreamed. 

Only as tales that are told ; 

Now all the joy that I hold 
Is but a vision that seemed. 

CHORUS. 

Dies the deepest thunder, 

Fades the gleam ; 
All is but a wonder 

And a dream. 

ACHILLES. 

As from the ocean come all founts and streams. 
And seek again the waters whence they sprang, 
So from the vastness of eternity, 
Come rivulets of time, that bear frail barques 
Of human life, and seek their ocean-home. 
Losing their ripples in its larger waves ; 
The mighty river that has borne the world. 
Since first it wakened at the word of gods. 
Flows on, a broadening current, to the sea. 
We hear the music of its mighty waves. 
The thunder of its dashing, and the play 
Of its spent billows ; but we can not see 
The ending of the stream ; nor far away, 
In mist-hung summits, where its course began. 
We watch the rising of the sun, and mark 
Its upward path, and follow its descent 
Below the earth ; but when we see the world 
Slow moving in the orbit we call Time, 
A broken arc is all that we behold. 



38 THE AMAZONS, 

A fragment only of the mighty whole 
That orbs itself from ancient primal dawn, 
To the yet distant mystery of night. 
How small a thing is one poor human life, 
In the majestic; unity that makes 
The human race ; and yet, when it is lost, 
And like a sea-shell stranded on the shore. 
Lies at our feet, we feel more bitter pain 
Than for the mighty multitudes of dead. 
The driftwood of unnumbered ages gone. 
The heart loves what is near and beautiful. 
More than the glory that is grand and far ; 
The faces near and loved shut from our sight 
The ranks of heroes and forgotten great ; 
As a fair, fragrant flower held to the face. 
Obscures a star ; or as a bird may hide. 
With daring flight, the splendor of the sun. 
But what were life without this nearer love, 
That holds the mingled cup of joy and pain 
To eager, thirsting lips ? It were a thing 
Of contemplation or of idle dreams ; 
A homeless phantom of a winter night. 
'Tis love transforms it to a radiant soul. 
Breathes in it with the warm breath of the gods, 
And clothes it in the garments of the dawn. 
'Tis love that blossoms in the wastes of life, 
Till all the chambers of the heart are full 
Of fragrance and of beauty ; it is love. 
That breaks the prison-barriers of the soul 
And lifts it to the heights of being ; blest 
Is he who plays on all the various strings 
Of love and draws divinest harmony 
Into the lofty paean of his life ; 
The love of home, of kindred, and of friends ; 
Allegiance to his country, and the pure 
High worship of the gods ; and last of all. 
That love that moved Endymion to rove 
The woods beneath the glamour of the moon 



THE AMAZONS, 39 

Searching the heavens for one perfect face ; 

That love that stirs the birds at nesting-time, 

That penetrates the jungles in the deeps 

Of haunted forests where the lioness 

Dwells with her savage mate; that breathes through all, 

Even the elements that blend and make 

The visible universe, the earth, and air, 

And sea ; the light, the darkness, and the storm ; 

That love that makes all habitats its home, 

But springs most beautiful in heart of man, 

And links him to the grandeur of the gods. 

Not as the stars that blossom one by one 

In pathless fields, but as the sun that breaks 

Full-orbed from morning clouds, it fell on me, 

Full of all warmth and beauty ; then unrest 

Woke in my heart, and tumult, and desire. 

Too soon eclipsed in everlasting night. 

All other loves were stars to this one sun, 

And at its dawning faded from my heart. 

All other feeUngs were but streams that flowed 

Into this one emotion's boundless sea. 

And now my heart, tossed ever on its waves. 

Is but the plaything of the wind and storm. 

Oh ! Love, that thou shouldst be so beautiful, 

And yet so cruel, unfathomable, and sad. 

CHORUS. 

Oh ! Love, with wings of the dawn's bright hue, 
And sweeping robes of a spotless white. 

Why is the air that thy breath passed through, 
Suflused with darkness and heavy with night ? 

Oh ! Love, why art thou so wondrous fair. 
With the godlike form and the angel face, 

With the light of heaven upon thy hair. 
And beauty that shines from thy dwelling-place? 

Thy voice is sweet as a siren's song. 
Thy words are promise of hope and joy ; 



40 THE A MA ZONS. 

But the heart that hearkens thy music long, 
The winds and waves of thy wrath destroy. 

ACHILLES. 

Had I not met her on this fatal field, 
Nor ever, under more auspicious skies, 
Beheld her matchless loveliness, nor known 
The greater beauty of her heart and mind. 
Then had my heart, unwakened by the touch 
Of love and longing, slumbered till the gods. 
Grown weary of my deeds, had called my soul 
To join the shadows ; blessed that I know 
The face of Love, though only for such space 
As lives the purple sunset in the sky. 
It shone upon me ; better thus, than live 
A thousand years of other lesser loves. 
Now, Love, alas! so beautiful and brief. 
With thy first touch upon me, I say farewell. 

CHORUS. 

Oh ! Love, thou art wind and the foam of seas. 

Thou art stars that fade and blossoms that die ; 
Thou art storms and the wrath of S;>Tiiplegades ; 

Thou art feet that run, thou art wings that fly. 
Thy breath is a perfume, thy glance a light ; 

Thy touch is a spell star-fallen and brief 
As the span of a fragrant summer night ; 

And the shadow that follows thy steps is grief. 
Oh ! Love, thou art fair, thou art false and fleet, 

A shadow, a phantom, a nameless dream ; 
A fruit that is bitter from flower that is sweet ; 

A fountain that dries, and a hidden stream. 

ACHILLES. 

What's left the heart when love and hope are flown? 
To live when all that makes life dear is dead ; 
To walk with men, but be with them no more 
In thought and feeling than the shadowy forms 



THE AMAZONS. 41 

That wander like the phantoms of a dream 

In the dim twilight of the underworld. 

To view familiar scenes with alien eyes, 

To watch unmoved the si:)lendors of the dawn, 

Nor see in it a symbol of great deeds 

That shed their glory over wondering worlds ; 

To note, without a thrill, the moonbeams lie 

Among the flickering shadows of the brakes. 

Or touch with silver softness craggy heights 

That round the valley stand like sentinels. 

To tell the gods how fares the world below ; 

To hear without a heart-throb all the winds 

Making aeolian music to the night, 

"While hang the billows underneath the stars. 

Pallid with gazing on the white-faced moon. 

To breathe without delight the perfume borne 

From fragrant haunts of faun and woodland nymph, 

To bind my brow with garlands while the cup 

Of Bacchus brings no pleasure; to lie down 

On rose-strewn couches knowing but the thorns ; 

To feel unstirred the sweeping of the wings 

Whose flight is life ; and hear the lapsing stream 

That sinks its waters in the ocean-flood ; 

To wait for death as one who waits for sleep. 

Through weary hours of suflTerance and toil ; 

To drop at last into the great abyss. 

Without regret or longing for the world. 

This, this is life, the best gift of the gods. 

What's left the heart when love and hope are flown? 

CHORUS. 

To share the burdens of a hapless world, 
To pour the healing oil of sympathy 
On grievous wounds and aching scars of life ; 
To warm the soul that wanders in the cold. 
To light the feet that stumble in the dark ; 
To offer holy prayers to all the gods, 
And rise, renewed, from purifying fires 



42 THE AMAZONS. 

Of sacrifices given in worthy deeds. 

ACHIliIiES. 

What's left the hands when love and hope are flown ? 

Never to raise the loved one to my breast, 

Never to bless her or to fondle babes 

That climb my knee and lisp their father's name. 

What's left the hands when love and hope are flown ? 

CHORUS. 

To lift the spear in the defense of right, 
To succor helplessness and smite the strong, 
To pour libations to the living gods. 
To point the way to valor and to truth. 

ACHILLES. 

What's left the feet when love and hope are flown? 

Never to wander in the echoing aisles 

Of wind-stirred forest or in mountain-glades, 

While at the low words of the tender tale, 

Her lips part and her bosom softly swells, 

While her eyes tremble 'neath the dropping lids ? 

Never to walk Life's pathways by her side, 

Never to linger for her halting feet. 

Or lean perchance her weakness on my strength ? 

What's left the feet when love and hope are flown ? 

CHORUS. 

To walk the heights before the eyes of men, 
And upward striving, reach the knees of gods. 

ACHILLES. 

Sweet Love, your memory will live with me, 
As echoes haunt the air where music dwelt ; 
Or as the twilight lingers after day. 
Your glory will not from my life depart. 
Till life itself drop silently to sleep. 
The image of this maid within my heart 



THE AMAZONiS, 43 

Will cast a halo on all deeds and thoughts, ^ 
And make them better for its presence there. 

THERSITES. 

Hear the brave warrior, Peleus' mighty son, 
Lament as Trojan women o'er their dead. 
His strong hands tremble and his cheeks are wet 
With childish tears ; I wonder not the gods, 
Unheedful of his sorrow, laugh in heaven. 
And who is she, this Amazon, this queen 
Of women, weakling of a weakhng race ? 
Foolish, she thought to lift her puny arm 
Against the might of Hellas, and she died. 

ACHIIiliES. 

Dare not, rash men, to speak a mocking word 
Of Penthesilea, bravest in the fight, 
Nor of my sorrow, and the gods' disdain. 

THERSITES. 

Why should I honor this slain Amazon ? 

It is not meet that women should usurp 

The paths of men and follow their high ways 

With faltering feet ; within the peristyle, 

Weaving among their maidens, they should pass 

The days that hnger till their lords' return. 

And for your sorrow, what is that to me ? 

How long did you, unmindful of us all. 

Keep to your tent, apart from bloody fields, 

Nursing your bitter anger with the king ? 

While in the fight the fair Achaean youths 

And honored warriors fell amid the dust. 

Like flowers unwithered that the strong wind breaks 

Tearing their fragrant petals from the stem ? 

Only, indeed, your loved Patroclus slain 

Could tempt you forth; 'twas not for Greece you 

fought. 
But to avenge the slaughter of your friend. 



44 THE AMAZONS. 

And now, a pallid face and yellow hair 

Make you forget the glory of the war, 

And grieve before the brave victorious ranks, 

As for a broken bauble cries a boy. 

Cast down the body of the Amazon, 

And let the vultures and the ravens feed 

On the white beauty that ensnares your eyes ; 

Let her soul be the bride of sorrow, as 

Her spotless body is the bride of death. 

ACHILLES. 

Since the gods silence not your impious tongue, 

Withdrawn to banquet in their high abodes. 

Unmindful of the heavy hearts of men, 

And even Artemis sends not an arrow 

To avenge the insults of this slaughtered maid ; 

Thus do I offer you a sacrifice 

To Pluto and the fair Persephone ; 

Send your dark soul among the darker shades ; 

And may the \ailtures tear your jeering tongue. 

And your ghost wander mourning by the shore 

Of the dim river for a hundred years. 

THERSITES. 

Ye gods ! I die beneath his ruthless hand ; 

But unavenged my spirit shall not go 

To the dark shades and twilit house of death. 

Ere long, when he has passed the shadowy stream, 

And enters in the hollow noiseless realms 

Of the grim Pluto, I shall meet him there. 

Even at the threshold, and delight mine eyes 

With looldng on the proud Achilles, slain 

By the weak hand of Priam's feeblest son. 

Not vainly did thy mother Thetis choose 

That thy career be brief and glorious. 

The time draws near ; Fate lifts her unerring hand ; 

Thy feet will tread Hellenic fields no more. 



THE AMAZONS. 45 

ACHILLES. 

Silence thy vaunts ; thou canst not prophesy. 
Stain not the threshold of the great unseen, 
Nor taint its breathless air with bitter words. 
Swift thy dark spirit takes its pathless flight. 
Thy hps are mute, thy tongue will jeer no more, 

CHORUS. 

Achilles, ever victor, stands 

Above the slain with crimson hands 

And blood-bright sword ; 
And even Fate seems to with-hold 
The strokes of slaughter manifold, 

From him, the battle's lord. 

That soul the gods have loved and made 
Of all hfe's dangers unafraid, 

And hfted high 
A glorious pathway for his feet, 
Will his high destiny complete ; 

He lives, and shall not die. 

So once, when Rhea hid, of yore, 
The infant Zeus, wild pigeons bore 

From Ocean's spring. 
Ambrosia ; and an eagle drew 
Nectar from rocks and, swift-winged, flew 

To heaven's fated king. 

Nor shall the Achaean hero die 
Before Hellenic battle-cry 

Bings in the walls 
Of fated Ilium ; and in fires 
Of torches and of funeral pyres, 

The glorious city falls. 

For us, we turn aside and go. 
Idle as winds that cease to blow. 

Back to our home. 
"We proudly came like waves at tide, 



46 THE AMAZONS. 

Backward like waves at ebb, we glide ; 
Our queen, the broken foam. 

ACHILLES. 

Take ye your queen and build a lofty pyre, 
AYrap her white limbs in softest rainment] ; shed 
Perfumes about her ; light the sacred fire, 
And make ye offerings for the lovely dead. 
Back to my tent I go with hea\^ thought 
Of all my hand this fateful day has wrought. 

CHORUS. 

Back from the field of battle 

Goes the illustrous victor ; 

Zeus and the gods upheld him. 

Lift on your shields the dead maiden, 

Spared by the conqueror's mercy. 

Lift her and bear from the battle ; 

Build ye a pyre and the softest 

Of raiment wrap round the fair body. 

Sweetened with incense and perfume. 

Let the priests all the rites render, 

And let the women bewail her. 

DIOMED. 

Thersites, who will wail and weep for thee, 
While Trojan women fill with lamentations 
The halls of Troy ? will proud Achilles raise 
A pj^re and place thine ashes in the urn, 
And oifer sacrifices to the gods ? 
Who will avenge thee for thy untimely death ? 
Who will avenge thee if it be not I ? 
Forgive me that I slew not him that slew, 
But let the raging lion escape the snare. 
Yet thou shalt be avenged ; to Zeus I make 
The awful vow, and to the darker gods 
That rule the realms of shadows and of night. 
What is't to me that this slain Amazon 



THE AMAZONS, 47 

Should touch the warrior heart ? My friend Ues low, 
Not slaughtered by the enemy to win 
Deathless renown and glory ; but struck down 
By one whose arm should have befriended him. 
I go, but unforgotten thou shalt be. 

SEMI-CHORUS. 

Low she Kes upon the sod, 
Who the field of battle trod ; 
Blue eyes hidden like the sky 
Over which the white clouds lie ; 
Bright hair fallen in the stain 
Of the dust like scattered grain ; 
Bosom motionless and white 
As the moon on summer night. 
Quiet are the feet that ran 
Fleet and well their little span ; 
Quiet are the hands that smote ; 
In the fair and fragile throat, 
Silent is the wonted note ; 
And the cheek that blushed to know 
Love and praise, is pale as snow. 
Lips from which the color goes, 
Lovely as the heart of rose, 
All their honeyed sweetness hold. 
Though they wither and are cold. 
Beautiful, serene, and fair. 
All we knew and loved is there. 
But the spirit wont to dwell 
Lovely and invisible. 
Love is lost and life is past ; 
Only death and silence last ; 
Like a battle that is fought. 
Like the memory of a thought, 
Fallen petals of a rose, 
Fading lines of melted snows. 
Tide-marks on the gleaming sands, 
Drifted clouds and broken bands. 



48 THE AMAZONS. 

Level seas where billows tossed, 
Life is past and love is lost. 

CHORUS. 

Oh ! the sea was gray when the early mist 

Wrapped it heavily in a shroud ; 
And the waves were red by the red dawn kissed, 

And myriad colors 'neath sun and cloud. 
The waters amber at blaze of noon, 

Turned crimson under the sunset bars ; 
And pale and ghostly beneath the moon, 

And black, when the vapors had hid the stars. 
The blue and green of a cloudless day 

Shifted and changed like the dolphin's hues ; 
The billows that rose and floated away. 

Were tinted and dyed like the rainbow's dews. 
Oh ! life is gray when the heart is sad, 

And aflame when hope is enthroned above , 
It has shifting colors when hours are glad. 

And is turned to gold by the light of love. 
It is pale and haggard with doubts and fears, 

It is crimson with passion and black with sin ; 
It ebbs and flows with the tide of years. 

And none can fathom the deeps within. 

SEMI-CHORUS. 

Like the phantom of a dream; 
Like the spirit of a stream; 
Breath of wind and foam of seas, 
Passing o'er S;yTXiplegades; 
Like a rainbow's broken light. 
Sorrow-born of stainless white. 
All its passions and desires 
A^iolet and crimson fires; 
Like the dawn that melts away, 
Drowned in the heart of day; 
Life is beautiful and brief; 
Death the dropping of a leaf. 



THE AMAZONS, 

Weep ye that the flower is dead, 
All its bloom and fragrance shed ? 
Do ye murmer, do ye sigh, 
That the sunset left the sky ? 
And would ye renew the strife 
Of the wonder we call Hfe ? 
What so beautiful and fair 
As the blue and vacant air ? 
What so measureless and deep 
As a sweet and dreamless sleep ? 
What though never more shall stir 
Feeling in the breast of her. 
Now so murmurless and still ? 
She has drank and had her fill 
Of the wine of mysteries. 
Yet has tasted not the lees. 
As the glitter of a spark 
Lives a moment in the dark; 
As the echo of a sound 
Rises hollow from the ground, 
And a transient moment fills 
All the vale between the hills; 
Life, the shadow of the wings 
Brooding on insensate things; 
Passes from the world of form 
Back into the cosmic storm. 
Like an arrow it has fled, 
By an unseen archer sped; 
And before the hand of Fate, 
Earth is inarticulate; 
Nor can man the gods resist. 
Driven from the world like mist. 
Still arise, serene and far. 
Heaven's torches, star on star; 
Still the moon her splendor throws 
On the ocean whence she rose. 
And the sea-wind breaks and blows; 
Still the mountain bulwarks stand 



50 THE AMAZONS. 

Round the city, dark and grand; 
Simois and Scamander run 
To the ocean, never done; 
Still, in passing days, the year 
Drops its withered blossoms here. 
But the soul alone is dumb 
When its flowering time is come; 
And the heart that love has stirred, 
Answers not an echoing word. 
If the full-orbed moon should fail, 
Or the twilight linger pale, 
If the streams should cease to flow, 
Or the winds forget to blow, 
It were not so sad or strange 
As the silence of this change. 
What are all the garnered sheaves 
Of the years but scattered leaves ? 
What are deeds of power and fame, 
But a swift-extinguished flame ? 
What the joys of love and home. 
But a spray of broken foam ? 
What the glory we have won, 
But the.setting of the sun? 

-ENEAS. 

Too true, alas ! too sad and true your words. 
What deeds of might can stay the common doom. 
Of all the pride and glory of the world ? 
Behold the fallen fortunes of our Troy. 
Even as Penthesilea when she came 
White-browed and queenly to the fatal field, 
Was our loved city fair and beautiful; 
And in the unequal combat she will fall 
As fell this maid; her altars will be stripped. 
Her temples overthrown, her stately halls 
Despoiled and ruined; and the household gods 
Homeless amid their broken images. 
Oh ! mother, if thy voice is ever heard 



THE AMAZONS. 51 

Among the counsels of the wiser gods, 

Lift it to save the city of thy son. 

If we should wander forth from this our home, 

What other land would have such fruitful fields, 

Such sparkling rivers and such sunny skies ? 

Though all the beauty of the world were found 

In some enchanted garden where the gods 

Came down from heaven to breathe the fragrant air, 

Where color, scent, and music all combined 

Their several witcheries to charm the sense; 

Yet were it not so sweet and dear as home. 

Methinks if I were lifted to the heights 

And set to banquet with the deathless gods, 

Forbidden evermore to cast my eyes 

Earthward upon the city that I love, 

The nectar and ambrosia could not quench 

The thirst and hunger of the human heart 

For the familiar and remembered scenes. 

Oh ! land made sacred by dear memories 

Of love and sorrow and of birth and death. 

Even as the eyes and hands and lips and hair 

Of mother to her infant, are thy hills. 

Mountains, and plains, and rivers to thy sons. 

Within thy bosom have we fallen asleep 

And safely dreamed our hopes and griefs and joys; 

And shall we wake to feel thy arms no more, 

And stumble in the darkness and cry out, 

Walking strange paths unguided and alone ? 

Loved Ilium, the walls our fathers built 

Yet guard the heights of thine AcropoUs, 

The marble palace of thine aged king. 

Homes of thy children, temples of thy gods. 

Still from thy Pergamos and towers we see 

The fertile plain of Troy, the triple stream 

That rolls its tawny waters from the heights 

Of Ida many-fountained to the sea. 

And still the beeches and the ohve-trees 

Cluster about thee; and across the plain 



52 THE AMAZONS. 

The hills and mountains purple with the mist 

Rise grand and beautiful; while in the west, 

In crimson waves of sunset swims the peak 

That lifts its head from far ^gean isles. 

Against the portals of the Scaean Gate 

Rises and falls the ceaseless tide of war. 

How long will Ilium upon her hill 

Stand like a rock amid the rushing waves ? 

How soon, alas ! with rent and broken sails 

Sink as a ship beneath the furious storm? 

Was it for this that ancient Ilus came, 

Following the rainbow cow, and where it lay 

Built the fair city; and was it for this 

The great Palladium fell before his tent, 

Sent to him by the kindly hand of Zeus ? 

In the right hand it held a lifted lance. 

Emblem of prowess in the city's sons; 

A spindle and a distaff in the left. 

Sign that her daughters would be chaste and true. 

Upon the Pergamos fair temples rose 

To Zeus, Athene, and the god of morn; 

The many-chambered palace of the king. 

And shrines and altars to the deathless gods; 

About the palace clustered many homes, 

And mighty walls and watch-towers girt about 

The city, like the armour of a king. 

In vain, in vain the glory of the Past; 

In vain the struggles of the nine long years 

The Achaean hosts have camped across the stream. 

What god was wroth when fickle Paris saw 

The lovely Helen and with swift-sailed ship 

Bore her away from ISIenelaus' halls ? 

How many of the Trojan heroes fall. 

How many women weep with unbound hair. 

While children sob not knowing why they grieve. 

Hector is dead; and unavenged the deed 

That woke the gods to anger; now this maid 

liies white and silent underneath the stars. 



THE AMAZONS. 53 

Even the prowess of the Amazons, 
Mighty among the nations of the world, 
Could not avail to stay the course of fate. 

CHORUS. 

We have worshipped the moon with our hymns, 

And armed we have moved in the dance; 
When the dusk of the twilight dims, 

And the world grows fair in her glance. 
We have lifted her altars and shrines. 

We have builded her temples and fanes, 
Where the glory of Ephesus shines, 

And the pride of our prowess remains. 
The city we founded and built, 

With its walls and its ramparts and towers; 
And the blood of the sacrifice spilt. 

And wreathed the fair altars with flowers. 
We come of Olympian race. 

From Ares our splendor and might; 
We are swift in the hunt and the chase, 

We are dauntless and strong in the fight. 
With the axe and the lance and the bow, 

We move as a wind that is swift ; 
We scatter the ranks of the foe, 

And leave them as sea-weed and drift. 
Where flourish the fig-tree and beech. 

And the Hellespont breaks on the shore. 
They have barkened the words of our speech; 

They have vanished our lances before. 
And where the ^Egean's blue waves 

Flow soft on his vine-laden isles, 
We have made for our enemies graves, 

We have withered the bloom of their smiles. 
In Hellas, Arabia, Thrace, 

Ethiopia, farthest of lands. 
They have darkened at sight of our face, 

In vain they have lifted their hands. 
Oh ! where are the strength and the might 



54 THE AMAZONS, 

That were given our armies of old ? 
Oh ! where are the lances that smite, 

Now the heat of the battle is cold ? 
Not so when Hippolyte died, 

Not so when Antiope fled; 
Then Heracles humbled his pride. 

And Athens was filled with her dead. 
But our leader, the bravest of queens, 

Our maiden, the fairest of maids, 
From the noise and the pain of these scenes, 

Has gone unavenged to the shades. 
Oh ! where are the arrows that flew, 

Oh ! where are the shields that were strong ? 
Oh ! where is the battle-axe true, 
Oh ! where are the lances that slew, 

And the arms to avenge us this wrong? 

Who will avenge you now that Troy no more 
Humbles her enemies, but bows her head 
To the foul insults of the haughty Greeks ? 

CHORUS. 

How they have wronged us, harken thou the tale, 

And how they fled before the Amazons. 

One day, Hippolyte, the fair and strong, 

Queen of the Amazons, on silken couch 

In her apartments, whiled away the hours, 

Looking with dreaming eyes upon the sea. 

From whose blue billows breaking on the shore. 

Came the cool breath of winds and with them blown, 

The smell of salt and sea-weed; gently stirred 

The queen's soft-flowing garments and her hair, 

FalUng in silken masses o'er her breast. 

The sun-kissed sky blushed red and shot a gleam 

That lit the whiteness of her cheek and brow. 

To her came Heracles, his matchless form 

And godlike features beautiful and strong 



THE AMAZONS. 55 

With strength and beauty as of mountain-oak, 

Or the Nemean lion that he slew. 

Eight labors had his mighty arm perforaied, 

And on a ninth his crafty mind was bent. 

Eurystheus commanded him to bring 

The girdle of the queen, that Ares gave, 

That made her mighty on the battle-field. 

Matchless the hero's courage, yet he feared 

To meet Hippolyte in open strife. 

Long had he lingered till the time was ripe 

To win by strategy the longed-for prize. 

At sight of him she rose upon her arm. 

And raised the hand that hung upon her couch. 

That he might lift and lay it to his breast. 

Then sank the hero low beside the queen. 

And to her heart she laid the kingly head 

And with her clinging hand caressed his hair. 

"Hippolyte, I came to say farewell." 

The voice was low and tender as the wind 

That sings at twilight hour the dirge of day. 

But to her ear more welcome were the shout 

Of sea-winds and the fury of the storm. 

" Tomorrow, at the break of day, my sails 

Filled with the wind, must leave these happy shores 

And seek again the land that I forsook 

To be with thee, too dear, too beautiful." 

The sun dropped into darkness and the gleam 

Faded from out her face and left it pale 

As the moon looking for Endymion. 

" Oh ! leave me not; what is the world but thee, 
And what is life but heart-throbs beating fast 
In rhythm to thy words ? forsake me not, 
Lest all the golden splendor of the day 
And molten beauty of the sun-touched sea 
Turn black before mine eyes; lest all the trees, 
Whose soft leaves whisper love and happiness, 
Stir only with the strain of funeral hymns; 



56 THE AMAZONS. 

Lest all the radiant fairness of the dawn 
Darken and tremble back behind the hills. 
Oh ! leave me not to memory and tears. 
What worth were hfe without thee, how could I, 
Desolate, widowed of my summer joy, 
Fill the slow measure of the days and nights 
Without thy presence ? how could I awake 
And rise to face the morning with my pain?" 

** Think only of the joy that we have known, 
Nor let it grieve thee that the hour is past. 
Where is the glory that was wont to move 
Thy spirit ? Where the noise of battle-field, 
The clash of lances and the clang of shields 
Stricken from alien hands upon the ground ? 
Soon in the eager combat wilt thou feel 
Swift as of old, and warm, the pulse of life; 
But, fair Hippolyte, do not forget. 
In battle scenes, these softer moments spent 
Beside the Thermodon with Heracles." 

** Forget ! ye gods, the whole of life will be 

One aching memory, one passionate prayer 

To heaven for thy love and thy return. 

Nor ever will the battle inter^^ene 

To hide the memory of thy lips and brow. 

If I could keep thy heart from growing cold, 

Or give assurance of my faithfulness, 

No wish so great but I would gladly grant. 

My heart, my life, my soul I gave to thee. 

And fain my hapless love would give thee more." 

The girdle slipped and loosened fell her robes 
Swelling with the pent passion of her heart. 

*' If I might keep this girdle as a sign," — 
She started and grew paler than the snow — 
" That thou art constant; and a gift to bring 
The memory of thy love like cooling springs 
In the deep-hid recesses of my heart; 



THE AMAZONS. 57 

This girdle that seems even a part of thee, 
That held thy form as erst these clasping arms; 
Then would it be a talisman to keejD 
My love still fragrant as fresh lotus-blooms." 

She turned her face a moment from his sight. 

*' Is this alone the gift to satisfy 

Thy love and longing ? Arrows swift and bows, 

Lances and helmets, axes, crescent shields, 

All weapons for the battle-field are here 

For thee to choose from; take them all and go, 

A god to war; and think, when aliens fall, 

Hippolyte is with thee in the fight." 

And is the girdle more than life to thee. 
Than heart and soul ? then must the god that gave 
Be dearer to thy love than Heracles." 

Swifter than flight of winds she rose and laid 

Her hands on either shoulder, looking straight 

(So queenly was she), in the hero's eyes; 

*' Tomorrow when the sun first stirs the hills 

From their dark dreams, and brightens all the sea. 

While yet the streets are empty of the throng. 

Will I go down to see thee spread thy sails. 

And bring the girdle and give it to thy hands. 

Another day mine eyes must look on thee; 

Not lose thee now." She turned from him and wept; 

A moment felt the pressure of his arms. 

His breath like stirring wings that fanned her cheek, 

A moment heard the murmur of his voice. 

Like gentle waters broken on the sand; 

Then sank upon her silken couch, alone. 

But Heracles sped seaward through the streets, 
Seeking his white-sailed ships; and roused the youths 
That came with him from Greece and bade them make 
All ready for the journey in the morn. 
Meantime did Hera, looking down on earth. 
See Heracles victorious in the ninth 



58 THE AMAZONS. 

Of his great labors; and her anger grew. 

Then Uke an Amazon the goddess came, 

And through the silent streets from house to house, 

Went noiselessly and woke the warrior maids. 

" Tomorrow morning," said the artful queen 

Of heaven, " go with your lances to the shore 

Where rock the foreign shijjs upon the tide; 

And you will find them ready to set sail, 

As sea-birds poising and spreading out their wings; 

And on the beach, your queen Hippolyte 

And Heracles, who thinks to bear her hence. 

As sign of victory o'er the Amazons." 

Purple the morning rose upon the hills 
And o'er the sea; the queen Hippolyte, 
With girdled robes and gleaming tresses bound. 
Sped swiftly through the lone and empty streets, 
Scarce echoing where her sandalled feet fell soft, 
And came where rocked the ships upon the tide. 
And Heracles stood waiting on the beach. 
Fair as a god; while yet they lingered, loath 
To say the heavy word of parting, came 
Like flocks of white-winged birds, the Amazons, 
With shields and lances, shouting battle-cries. 
Then turned the wrathful hero to the queen, 
Who shrank aghast before his lifted arm 
And the good lance that glittered in the sun. 
" What treachery of thine has armed the land 
Against me ? Is the girdle worth my life, 
That thou shouldst fill the streets with Amazons, 
And bar my passage to the waiting ships?" 

She raised her arm as to with-hold the blow. 

" Dost fear to die who would have slain thy love, 

And ask for mercy him thou wouldst not spare?" 

From her white quivering throat there broke a sob, 
A sound as made by a death-wounded dove. 
" I ask no quarter; for an Amazon 



THE AMAZONS. 59 

Scorns it; but only that thou knowest me true; 
Why the armed women follow to the ships, 
I know not; I have lain upon my couch, 
Alone with sorrow and my thoughts of thee. 
Slay me unarmed; but do not deem me false. 
Strike to the heart that loves thee." Here she drew 
Her robe aside and waited for the blow. 

It fell; and as the blood leaped to his lance, 
"Farewell, false queen," he said; and when she sank, 
Tore from her robe the girdle and turned away. 
Nor saw the arms and eyes that followed him. 
Nor heard the dying whisper that forgave. 

Like the wild roarings of a hundred winds. 

Or mingled thunder of unnumbered storms. 

The clamor of the Amazons arose 

At sight of slain Hippolyte; they swept 

The trembling Greeks before them to the ships; 

But many lay upon the beach, no more 

To look on Hellas; even Heracles 

Fled with his shivered shield and broken lance; 

But still the girdle hung upon his arm; 

And as the sails spread out before the breeze. 

Backward he looked upon the Amazons, 

And tlie heaped corses of his slaughtered friends. 

That strewed the shore; pursuing arrows flew 

And stirred the troubled and broken waves to foam, 

And rent the sails and quivered in the deck. 

^NEAS. 

Much have you suffered from the haughty Greeks, 
And yet your glory has been great indeed; 
Since hardly the Hellenic heroes fled 
Back with their lives; and even Heracles, 
In fraud, not battle, overcame your queen. 

CHORUS. 

Greater the glory after Theseus 



eO THE AMAZONS. 

Carried the brave Antiope away. 
Scarcely had Heracles returned to Greece, 
Ere came the Athenian hero with his troops, 
And sought to plunder and destroy the land. 
The warriors were unarmed; but at the cry 
Of battle, swift prepared them for the fight. 
Led by the fair Antiope, whose form, 
Slender and stately as a mountain fir, 
Moved ever at the front; mid dust of war. 
And flash of steel, and hillocks of the slain 
Who fell beneath her strokes, the hero saw 
And loved her; far behind her were her troops; 
About her she had placed a wall of dead, 
And stood within the army of her foes. 
At Theseus' word they formed a circle round 
The queen, and he advanced with lifted lance; 
But swift her battle-axe cleft through his mail, 
The while she lifted up the crescent shield 
And turned aside his stroke; then had she slain 
The adventurous hero, but his friends drew near, 
And though they fell before her like the rain, 
Yet came they on until her strength was spent. 
And Theseus, gathering her within his arms, 
Bore her unconscious from the battle-field. 
Then had the Amazons destroyed the host 
Of Grecian heroes, but they fled and reached 
The ships and spread their sails before the breeze. 

Swifter than flight of homeward-faring bird 
They fled; meanwhile, the Amazons prepared 
For a long war and followed them to Greece. 
Hellas lay blooming like a garden planned 
For pleasure of the gods; the vineyards blushed 
For Dionysius' coming; and the fig, 
Ohve, and lemon gave such luscious fruit. 
Scarce the ambrosia of the gods excelled. 
For many days the women warriors roved 
The land and plundered all the blossoming fields; 



THE AMAZONS. 61 

Making their homes like nymphs and dryades 
In the deep woodlands and beside the streams. 
At last they came to Athens; through her gates 
Poured, a resistless flood; the city rose 
As out of sleep and put her armor on. 
The streets were filled with fighting; at the base 
Of the Acropolis raged fierce the war; 
And surely would the mighty Amazons 
Have left but smoking ruins where now stands 
The templed city; but Athene saw, 
And with her arms and awful aegis came 
And led the fight; and only from her wrath 
Did the invaders flee without the gates. 

Well were it had the city been destroyed 
And lovely Hellas wrested from their hands. 
Always their arms are lifted up to smite; 
Always their feet are following alien paths 
Seeking new conquest; I am weary grown 
Of war and battle; sweet the household shrines, 
The peaceful hours, and smiles of those we love. 
Oh! dear and sweet is home as summer dreams 
That haunt the meadows and enchanted woods. 
When swings the bird upon the swaying bough, 
Full-throated, tremulous with breaking song; 
When sleep the winds upon the sunny slopes, 
And in the grasses where the blossoms break 
In white and purple splendor; dear and sweet 
The soft famiUar voices that we know 
As the faint music that the sea-nymphs hear. 
When the winds, lightly passing, kiss the waves, 
Nor stir their bosoms with ungentle breath. 
And sweet and dear the faces that have grown 
Into our love, as flowers that breathe a balm. 
Upon the quiet air; as stars that shine 
To startle into loveliness the night. 
But we must die or see the homes we love 



62 THE AMAZONS. 

Ashes and ruins; while the faces fade, 

As flowers that furl their petals in the sun, 

Or stars that shrink aflrighted from the day; 

While die the mellow voices like the sound 

Of plaintive echoes in a dim recess 

Banked in with thymy slopes and misty hills; 

Or as the fading foot-falls of the gods, 

Who seek at dewy night their earthly loves, 

Melt into silence at the stir of dawn. 

Much have the Grecians wronged you, but your 

homes 
Still stand unplundered by the Thermodon. 

CHORUS. 

Our homes, alas ! with her who blest them gone; 
The fairest, bravest of our mighty queens. 
Sweetest of those by foreign heroes slain. 
Wisest and best and strongest in the fight. 
Where find we now a queen to lead our hosts 
To conquest ? Where a maiden that will rule 
So nobly in our city by the sea ? 
Our homes are filled with mourning and our land 
Louder with lamentations than with winds 
And billows breaking on the glimmering shore. 

MESSENGER. 

Let the moon veil her silver face in clouds, 
And on the swift feet of the summer winds, 
Speed back to heaven and leave earth desolate. 
Let Artemis take down the crescent shield 
From the calm skies and break it into stars; 
For haply they will light the path of man, 
Nor lend their torches to his funeral pyre. 
The shield is broken on the battle-plain; 
The queen of earth is vanished into night. 
And let the silver tongues of all the winds 
That murmur in ^olus' caverns, break 
Into lamenting; let the brazen clash 



THE AMAZONS. 63 

Of heavy billows roll tempestuous 
Lashed to a storm of passion and despair. 
Let all the cedars on the mountain-tops, 
Stooping to hear the faint voice of the winds, 
Whisper and sigh the story to the night. 
Perchance the oreads will hear the tale, 
And murmur it to lovers when they sit 
Upon the mountain-side beneath the stars; 
Or happy goddessess and women warm 
In clasping arms, shudder at thought of her, 
Cold with the kisses of the river-god; 
The foam upon her lips and in her hair; 
The chill within her bosom, while the night, 
Upon her eyes drops starless 'neath the waves. 

CHORUS. 

What mean you by the river and the foam? 

MESSENGER. 

Ye gods, if all the fountains and the streams 
Were human tears, yet were they not enough 
To greet the tale that trembles to be told, 
Crouching behind the portal of my lips. 
Monstrous, to spring and prey upon your hearts. 
Already like a polished pearl she lay, 
Perfumed and shrouded for the sacred rites, 
And lovely as the memory of a dream; 
While far-off Charon steered his phantom barque 
The hither side of Styx; and backward rolled 
The gates of Hades, waiting for her soul. 
Peace is the meed of him who leaves the world, 
Having lived to the end of some good thing, 
Accomplished it at last, or died for it; 
And having given his body to the gods 
With sacrificial rites and pious prayers. 
So on her features lay a holy calm, 
As shine the moon-beams on a quiet lake. 
Deep in the heart of night; so still the brow, 



64 THE AMAZONS, 

So still and white and motionless the form, 
When life and love and battle all are done. 
But never will her spirit walk serene 
Among the shadows of the under-world, 
Till the slow circle of a hundred years 
Her homeless feet have trodden on the shore. 
The waters of Scamander bear the maid 
Paler than foam of billows to the sea. 

CHORUS. 

Alas! that we should live and hear the tale. 
But who so daring he would tempt the gods, 
By such a deed; thrice hated, thrice accursed ? 

MESSENGER. 

'Twas Diomed, the pitiless, the bold. 
Who wounded Aphrodite on the hand, 
And even sent the mighty god of war 
With groans to heaven; Diomed, who stole 
With wise Ulysses to the Trojan camp. 
As all lay sleeping. Rhesus slew, and led 
His famous steeds in triumph to the Greeks. 
In the dark stillness of the night he came. 
As vulture swooping on the slaughtered dove, 
And like a timid flock the watchers fled. 
Fierce with the hatred of the haughty race, 
And mad for vengeance, in his arms he raised 
The lovely sleeper from her perfumed couch, 
And in the darkness speeding like the wind, 
Bore her to old Scamander's reedy banks; 
And there, while Artemis with unmoved face 
Looked from her silver throne amid the stars, 
He lifted high the maiden in his arms. 
And cast her from him in the sobbing waves, 
That broke the phantom image of the moon. 
And sighed and murmurea to the heavy night. 
Then would one say that Artemis indeed 
Had left her throne to slumber on the stream, 



THE AMAZONS. 65 

While still her silver shield hung in the sky; 
For lovely as the goddess that she loved, 
The queen lay rocking on the yellow breast 
Of old Scamander; wnile the low-voiced winds 
Chanted the strophes of her bridal hymn. 

CHORUS. 

But where were they, the Trojans, while he fled 
With Penthesilea through the night and gloom ? 

MESSENGER. 

Fleetly they followed, but his feet were winged, 

And as they neared the margin of the stream, 

They saw her unbound hair, hke floating reeds, 

Upon the water, and her face upraised 

As if in pleading, to the archer-queen. 

A moment only; then the waves flowed on, 

Serene, unbroken, palhd with the moon; 

And nodding by the river in the breeze, 

The lotus and the snow-white asphodel 

Amid the rushes gleamed hke fallen stars. 

But meanwhile Diomed had sped away. 

And all in vain they searched the river-bank, 

And open plain; the robber left no trace 

More than the wind upon undrifted snow. 

Slumber the gods that things hke this can be ? 

How often have men cried to them in vain. 

Lifted imploring eyes and heavy hearts. 

Rich sacrifices spread and spilled the wine. 

Wreathed woodland fanes and altars with fair 

flowers 
And heard no answer to their murmured prayers 
But mocking laughter of the wanton winds, 
Playing with blown wet tresses of the nymphs; 
Or happy pipe of birds in leafy nests. 
Or sobbing shudder of the breaking sea. 
Calm as the stars and colder than the moon. 
More swiftly changing than the star of day, 



66 THE A MA ZONS. 

Showing their faces now in kindly deeds 

And hiding them anon to leave us lost 

In night and tempest; changeless are the gods 

In youth immortal and eternal bloom; 

But changeful unto man as yonder bow 

That hangs its silver crescent up tonight, 

And erelong broadens to a Grecian shield, 

Then breaks and fades and vanishes away. 

And yet men pray and worship, seeking still 

A strength to stay their weakness and a light 

To kindle the quenched torches that they bear. 

'Tis not the gods that slumber, but mankind; 

'Tis not the eternal changes, but the soul. 

We are but children sobbing in the night. 

And feeling in the darkness for the breast 

Of universal Life; Oh ! blest is he. 

Who hears the mighty beatings of her heart, 

And lays his throbbing temples on the calm 

White bosom, while his lips, in eager draught, 

Are filled with wisdom from her sacred fount. 

He hears the songs unhymned of mortal bard, 

Wild strains of music swept from vibrant lyres 

Whose strings are thought and passion; and he sees 

Above the rosy scarf of Iris' robes. 

The glimmer of a ray unknown to earth. 

So Man, were he but childlike in his love, 

Faithful to all the promptings of the gods, 

Would see them face to face, nor seek in vain 

To follow them and clasp their knees in prayer. 

Alas! his eyes, turned often from the light, 

Are dazzled by its splendor and are bhnd. 

His soul went dreaming on a summer day 

And found the isle of Circe in the sea. 

And drank the wine of sin; and so his gaze 

Fell from the glory of the stars to earth. 

The night grows deeper and the stars come out, 



THE AMAZONS. 67 

A million torches for the funeral rites 

Of the slain queen; the sea-winds sing sad strains, 

And all the waves are sobbing on the shore 

With lamentation for the lovely dead. 

Earth, night, and ocean bid her spirit rest. 

But on the Greeks the gods avenge this wrong. 

Bow down their haughty heads and bend their knees, 

Darken the splendor of their glancing spears, 

And stain their limbs and armor with the dust. 

Make widows of their wives that watch and wait 

In vain to see their white sails from afar. 

O'er the horizon loom hke floating clouds. 

Or spreading wings of sea-birds; make their sons, 

Sobbing and clinging to their mothers' robes. 

Orphans that vainly babble of their sires, 

Not knowing they will never see them more. 

Crumble their walls and strike their bulwarks down, 

Lay low their citadels and blight their fields. 

Scatter their armies as the chaff that flies 

Before strong winds; make desolate their homes. 

Ruin their temples and their wayside shrines. 

Make all their land from sea to sounding sea, 

Cities and valleys and the fertile plains, 

Woodlands and forests and mountain-heights, 

A waste and ruin; make their people flee 

And find no refuge; bind the chains of slaves 

Upon their wives and children, while they fall 

Before a pitiless enemy and their limbs 

Unburied, feed the vulture and the kite; 

And make their name, once splendid with renown. 

Forgotten from the annals of the world. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

Where is the maiden peerless. 
Mighty in war and fearless, 
Lovely and fair as the dawn ? 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Under the rippling water, 



S THE AMAZONS, 

White from Achaean slaughter, 
Slumbers the Amazons' daughter, 
Torn and haggard and wan. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

Is it the stars that shiver 
Their silver lights in the river, 
Is it the moon's pale gleam ? 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Those are her eyes that brighten, 
Those are her arms that whiten. 
Those are her features that lighten 
The gloom of the shadowy stream. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

Is that the drifting rushes. 
Is that a flower that brushes 
Its petals upon the waves ? 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Those her unfilleted tresses, 
Lips that were made for caresses, 
Fingers the water-god presses. 
Beauty the water-god laves. 

CHORUS. 

Rippled and stirred by the wind's faint flurries, 
Onward the undulent current hurries. 
The fret of life and its ceaseless worries 

Sleep in the breast of the silent queen; 
Turned is the soul from its high endeavor. 
The old world-voices are hushed forever. 

Her feet have trodden the paths unseen. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

Under the faint star-candles, 
Night in her silver sandals, 



THE AMAZONS. 69 

Speeds to the glowing Morn; 
Morn as a bride receives her, 
Robes of the sunrise weaves her, 
Slays and kisses and leaves her, 

Dim and pallid and worn. 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

So did the maiden hasten, 
Swift to avenge and chasten, 

Strong to the battle-plain; 
The heart of Achilles knew her; 
The hand of Achilles slew her; 
With robes of the dust to strew her, 

He left her among the slain. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

As;tiger from mountain fastness, 
As monster from ocean vastness. 
Came the fierce Diomed. 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Far from the arms of lover, 
With only the waves for cover. 
With wails of the wind above her. 
Slumbers the lovely dead. 

CHORUS. 

Life's sweet guerdon her spirit misses. 
Never for her our earthly blisses, 
Never the touch of love's warm kisses, 

Only the chill of the river's lips; 
Never for her the bridal tapers, 
Only the mist and gloomy vapors, 

Only the night and love's eclipse. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

Far from the flowing Scamander, 
Alone does her shadow wander. 
On shores of the murmurless stream; 



70 THE AMAZ0N8, 

And still does she shudder and shiver 
At sight of the desolate river, 
Her spirit athrob and aquiver, 
As under the spell of a dream. 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Lo ! Charon looks gloomy before him, 
Unmoved that her white hands implore him, 

Unheeding her prayers and her tears; 
No matter how lonely her flight is, 
No matter how heavy the night is. 
While over the river Thersites 

The shadowy boatman steers. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

Oh ! never the queen will greet us, 
Laid low by the son of Thetis, 
Dishonored by Diomed ; 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

And never the fire that dashes 
On pyre, and on altar flashes, 
Will give us the sacred ashes 
For memory of the dead. 

CHORUS. 

Her deeds are done and her words are spoken. 
The wine is quaflTed and the bowl is broken; 
Oh ! what is Life that it leaves no token. 

Oh ! what is Death that it makes no sign? 
Are they the real that blossoms and passes, 
The flowers that fade and the withered grasses. 

Or only the shadows of form divine ? 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

Lo! a white face uplifted, 
Lo! a fair body drifted 
Out on the rushing stream; 



THE AMAZONS. 71 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Mad are the waves with motion, 
Drunk with the wild wind's potion, 
Lost in infinite ocean. 
Faded as fades a dream. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

Softly the nymphs are risen, 
Purple their tresses glisten. 

Wide are their purple eyes; 
Parting the waves asunder, 
Mutely they look and wonder; 
Never such beauty under 

Billowy seas and skies. 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Even the gloomy Poseidon 
Watches her glimmer and glide on, 

Whiter than spray and foam; 
Thinks her a goddess in slumber, 
Of the immortal number. 
Careless of sea-weeds' cumber, 

Strayed from Olympian home. 

CHORUS. 

Hark! the winds and the waves are slowly 
Chanting their hymns for the dead, who lowly 
Lays her head on the couch unholy. 

Spread with the drift and slime of the deep; 
Down in the gloom the oceanids pour all 
Their hidden wealth of pearls and of coral 
. To deck the queen in her silent sleep. 

FIRST SEaH-CHORUS. 

Peacs to the maiden lonely, 
Peace to her soul, for only 

Prayers we can give, and tears; 
Lost to the light and splendor, 



72 THE AMAZONS. 

Silence and gloom attend her; 

May the Eumenides send her 

Peace in the pulseless years. 

SECX)ND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Never a smile will cheer her, 
Never a lover near her, 

Never a face from the throng; 
Never a note of laughter 
Ripple and sparkle after; 
Never the wind will waft her 

Words and the splendor of song. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 



Gone as dew from the blossom. 
Gone as dawn from the hills; 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Slowly the dim hours wear on; 
Only from swamp and barren, 
Lo ! the voice of the heron 
Night and the silence fills. 

CHORUS. 

Oh! that we left our fields to the reaper, 
Oh! that we prayed to Zeus, the Keeper, 
Oh! that we mourn the beautiful sleeper. 

Silent and cold in the cold still sea; 
Would we had left not our woodland chases, 
Would we had sought not the foreign faces. 

Would we had come not, lost Troy, to thee. 

FIRST SEMI-CHORUS. 

There does the night bring easeful 
Hours and dream visions peaceful, 

Breathing of dew and shade; 
There in the green fields hilly. 



THE AMAZONS. 73 

White in the moon-light stilly, 
Slumber the rose and lily, 
Stainless and unafraid. 

SECOND SEMI-CHORUS. 

Not the tumult of battle, 
Not the clamor and rattle, 

Not the flashing of spears; 
Only the cool dim noises. 
Night's intangible voices; 
Haply the wind rejoices. 

And but a wood-nymph hears. 

CHORUS. 

Oh ! for the sea and mountain. 
Oh ! for the stream and fountain, 

Oh ! for the fields of home; 
Moon o'er the lake arisen, 
Waters that break and glisten, 
Valleys that wake and listen. 

Woodlands, we come, we come. 



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